The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment

Surface water quality has deteriorated in recent years due to the emerging pollutants from urbanization. In line with Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), adequate treatment is crucial to enhance the effluent discharges to the water bodies. Therefore, the potential of microalgae as phytoremediation,...

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Published in:E3S Web of Conferences
Main Author: Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85213865009&doi=10.1051%2fe3sconf%2f202458906002&partnerID=40&md5=104c718dd344f9a42f360d82aecde561
id 2-s2.0-85213865009
spelling 2-s2.0-85213865009
Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
2024
E3S Web of Conferences
589

10.1051/e3sconf/202458906002
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85213865009&doi=10.1051%2fe3sconf%2f202458906002&partnerID=40&md5=104c718dd344f9a42f360d82aecde561
Surface water quality has deteriorated in recent years due to the emerging pollutants from urbanization. In line with Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), adequate treatment is crucial to enhance the effluent discharges to the water bodies. Therefore, the potential of microalgae as phytoremediation, especially Chlorella vulgaris, in revolutionizing municipal wastewater treatment can be a substitute for the conventional method. Thus, this study aims to determine the percentage of pollutants in wastewater removed via microalgae. Effluent samples were taken from the wastewater treatment plant of Universiti Teknologi MARA, Campus Dengkil, Selangor. The experiment was conducted in an aerated batch reactor with LED light to boost the microalgae growth. Microplastic has been inserted in the batch culture of microalgae to estimate the biodegradation process further. From the results observation, the percentage removal for the ammonia-nitrogen is approximately 98%, with biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) at the highest rate of 82%. Later, the reduction percentage of chemical oxygen demand (COD) was 96.6%. After the treatment, separately, nitrate-nitrogen and nitrite-nitrogen removal capacity were obtained as 99% and 99.7%. Lastly, for the phosphorus, the removal percentage was 98.48%. Consequently, this research can better understand the environmental and operational factors which can maximize the formation of algal biofilms and enhance the effectiveness of wastewater treatment. It also underscores the need for further research in optimizing the concentrations and combinations of these additives for more efficient wastewater treatment. © The Authors, published by EDP Sciences.
EDP Sciences
25550403
English
Conference paper

author Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
spellingShingle Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
author_facet Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
author_sort Muqhrey M.; Kasmuri N.; Selim H.; Nayono S.E.; Ahmad R.
title The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
title_short The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
title_full The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
title_fullStr The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
title_full_unstemmed The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
title_sort The Potential of Algae-Based Nutrient Removal in Wastewater Treatment
publishDate 2024
container_title E3S Web of Conferences
container_volume 589
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1051/e3sconf/202458906002
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85213865009&doi=10.1051%2fe3sconf%2f202458906002&partnerID=40&md5=104c718dd344f9a42f360d82aecde561
description Surface water quality has deteriorated in recent years due to the emerging pollutants from urbanization. In line with Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), adequate treatment is crucial to enhance the effluent discharges to the water bodies. Therefore, the potential of microalgae as phytoremediation, especially Chlorella vulgaris, in revolutionizing municipal wastewater treatment can be a substitute for the conventional method. Thus, this study aims to determine the percentage of pollutants in wastewater removed via microalgae. Effluent samples were taken from the wastewater treatment plant of Universiti Teknologi MARA, Campus Dengkil, Selangor. The experiment was conducted in an aerated batch reactor with LED light to boost the microalgae growth. Microplastic has been inserted in the batch culture of microalgae to estimate the biodegradation process further. From the results observation, the percentage removal for the ammonia-nitrogen is approximately 98%, with biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) at the highest rate of 82%. Later, the reduction percentage of chemical oxygen demand (COD) was 96.6%. After the treatment, separately, nitrate-nitrogen and nitrite-nitrogen removal capacity were obtained as 99% and 99.7%. Lastly, for the phosphorus, the removal percentage was 98.48%. Consequently, this research can better understand the environmental and operational factors which can maximize the formation of algal biofilms and enhance the effectiveness of wastewater treatment. It also underscores the need for further research in optimizing the concentrations and combinations of these additives for more efficient wastewater treatment. © The Authors, published by EDP Sciences.
publisher EDP Sciences
issn 25550403
language English
format Conference paper
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record_format scopus
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